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Paul Mac
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Key Information
Paul Francis McDermott (born 17 September 1965), who performs as Paul Mac, is an Australian electropop musician, singer-songwriter, producer and music re-mixer. He was classically trained at Sydney Conservatorium of Music. Mac has formed various bands including Smash Mac Mac (1986–88), The Lab (1989–1998), Itch-E and Scratch-E (1991–present), Boo Boo Mace & Nutcase (1996–98), and The Dissociatives (2003–2005). Mac has released two solo albums, 3000 Feet High (6 August 2001) and Panic Room (17 October 2005) – both appeared in the top 40 on the ARIA Albums Chart.
At the ARIA Music Awards of 2002 Mac won 'Best Dance Release' for 3000 Feet High and was nominated for 'Best Male Artist' and 'Engineer of the Year'. In June 2001 he released his highest-charting single, "Just the Thing", which featured lead vocals by Peta Morris. It reached No. 17 on the ARIA Singles Chart and at the APRA Music Awards of 2002 it won 'Most Performed Dance Work'.
Mac played with Severed Heads. He was also a touring member of Silverchair as well as recording piano parts for their album, Young Modern (March 2007), having worked with frontman Daniel Johns as The Dissociatives previously. He has provided remixes for Silverchair, Powderfinger, The Mark of Cain, Grinspoon, The Cruel Sea, INXS and Placebo. Mac has worked on soundtracks for Baz Luhrmann and on the films Head On and Sample People. He was the musical director on the Australian TV show, Good News Week, and composed music for ABC-TV including The Afternoon Show, EC Plays Lift Off, Play School and TVTV.
Biography
[edit]Mac was born on 17 September 1965.[1][2] He is the youngest of seven children and grew up in a strict Catholic family in Sydney.[2] As a teenager Mac played hymns on the organ at his local church, including for weddings and funerals.[3] He later described himself as "the worst Virgo, ex-Catholic you've ever met".[2] He is a classically trained graduate from Sydney Conservatorium of Music, as a Bachelor of Music Education.[2][4] In the mid-1980s he was a member of Smash Mac Mac, which were an art noise band covering Talking Heads material – Mac introduced drum machines and electronic elements.[5][6] In 1987 they issued the album, Chapter One: Light on the Silo.[7] In 1989 Mac formed the synthpop, electronica group The Lab in Sydney with Yolanda Podolski on lead vocals, and Warwick Hornby (aka Warwick Factor) on vocals and bass guitar. The group signed with rooArt, which released their two extended plays, Ultra (1992) and Terminal (1993). They moved to BMG and issued their debut album, Labyrinth, in 1997. The group disbanded the following year.
1991–1997: Itch-E and Scratch-E
[edit]In 1991, Mac formed a side-project, Itch-E and Scratch-E, with fellow Sydney-based electronica artist, Andy Rantzen of the group, Pelican Daughters.[5][8] Both provided keyboards and samplers.[8] Itch-E and Scratch-E became their main focus with the success of their debut album, Itch-E Kitch-E Koo (1993), and its related single, "Sweetness and Light" (1994). At the ARIA Music Awards of 1995 the single won Best Dance Release.[8] During his acceptance speech Mac controversially declared, "We'd like to thank all of Sydney's ecstasy dealers, without whom this award would not be possible".[9] One of the sponsors of the ceremony was the National Drug Offensive, which withdrew their support. In 2005, Mac explained that he did not expect to win and so had not prepared a speech.[9] The group often includes Sherriff Lindo for live performances.[8] From 1996 to 1998, Mac and Rantzen also performed as Boo Boo and Mace!, and with Lindo aboard they worked as Boo Boo Mace 'n' Nutcase.[5][8]
1997–2000: work with Silverchair, Paul Mac Presents SnapShots and I Can't Believe It's Not Rock
[edit]In 1997, Mac remixed the single, "Freak", from Australian post-grunge band Silverchair's second album, Freak Show. The track was issued in April as a B-side of their second single from that album, "Abuse Me".
In 1998, Mac released a four-track EP, Paul Mac Presents Snapshots, on Interdance Records. It featured guest vocals by Stephen Allkins on "Ooh I Love Your (Disco)", Infusion on "Loco", Phil Smart on "Basic Boom" and Abel El Toro on "All Systems Are Go".[10] Mac again worked with Silverchair's Daniel Johns as an alternative rock duo to release a five-track extended play, I Can't Believe It's Not Rock (2000).[5]
2001–2005: 3000 Feet High, The Dissociatives and Panic Room
[edit]On 6 August 2001, Mac issued his debut solo album, 3000 Feet High, which peaked in the top 30 on the ARIA Albums Chart.[11] Australian music journalist, Ed Nimmervoll, felt the album was an "emotional journey" where "[t]hroughout, the dancefloor taunts us like a temptress, determined to lure us into her arms, but we're torn between her charms and the inner us which the dance beats may drown out".[4] The album's second single, "Just the Thing", reached No. 17 on the ARIA Singles Chart and featured lead vocals by Peta Morris.[11] In December 2001 he performed at Homebake on the Big Top stage. At the APRA Music Awards of 2002 "Just the Thing" won 'Most Performed Dance Work' and was nominated for 'Most Performed Australian Work'.[12][13] In January 2002, and again in 2006, Mac appeared at Splendour in the Grass. At the ARIA Music Awards of 2002 Mac won 'Best Dance Release' for 3000 Feet High and was nominated for 'Best Male Artist' and 'Engineer of the Year'.[14]
Mac and Johns co-wrote the music for Love Is a Four Letter Word (2001) episode 13, "Split".[15] In mid-2003, the Mac and Johns formed another alternative rock group, The Dissociatives, which issued their debut album of the same name in April 2004.[16][17] Their first live show was in Hobart in June of that year.[6] Mac explained his motivation, "As music narrows out into increasingly smaller genres, it's important to bring the fun of making music back into play. Not following any predetermined rules and making the most honest beautiful music we could is fun".[6] At the ARIA Music Awards of 2004 Mac and Johns were nominated for 'Producer of the Year' for the album.[18]
Mac's second album, Panic Room, appeared on 17 October 2005, and reached the top 40.[11] Johns had advised Mac to "follow your dreams regardless of what outside fashion is saying you should be doing".[19] Vocals are variously supplied by Morris, Sarah McLeod, Luke Steele, Abby Dobson (ex-Leonardo's Bride), Lenka, and Ngaiire.[19] Mac explained seeing Joseph, on TV in August 2004, "I was watching the episode of [Australian Idol] when she got kicked out and I thought 'who is this girl, she is fantastic'... I tracked her down and gave her a call. It turned out great. I am just really happy with the whole album".[20] For Silverchair's 2007 album, Young Modern, Mac supplied piano and toured with the group providing keyboards and piano on stage.[21]
2008–2014: soundtracks, remixes and touring
[edit]In 2008, Mac provided the music for a one-man comedy play, Possessed, performed by Frank Woodley.[22] In March that year, he supplied the theme song, "The Only One" for the feature film, Hey, Hey, It's Esther Blueburger, with three versions on the soundtrack: one had vocals by Bertie Blackman, another by Sydney Children's Choir and one was an instrumental.[23] He formed a production duo, Stereogamous, with Jonny Seymour (aka DJ Seymour Butz), in 2010 they worked on LCD Soundsystem's single, "I Can Change", from their album, This Is Happening.[24][25] They have also remixed "Cupid Boy" for Kylie Minogue and "Bring Night" for Sia.[24] In 2011 they worked on George Michael's track, "Every Other Lover in the World".[24] Mac co-wrote "I Don't Care What You Say" with its performer Anthony Callea and Cindy Ryan (of Stella One Eleven); it was released in February 2012 by Callea on his seven-track EP, Last to Go, which was co-produced by Mac.[26] On 6 September, the feature film, Kath & Kimderella, premiered with Mac's musical score.[27] He also has a cameo in the final scene.
2015–present: Holiday From Me and Mesmerism
[edit]On 22 January 2015, Mac announced the forthcoming release of his third studio album, titled Holiday From Me. It will feature Megan Washington, Brendan Maclean, Dave Mason and Nathan Hudson on vocals.[28]
In February 2019, Mac released a new single titled "Cataplexy" and confirmed a new album is coming soon.[29] In April, Mac confirmed the album is titled Mesmerism and will be released on 3 May 2019. That same year, Mac composed a new score for the silent film The Sentimental Bloke (1919). The score was commissioned by the National Film and Sound Archive and performed live by Mac during screenings of the film.[30]
Academic career
[edit]Decades after completing his earlier music degree, Mac returned to his alma mater, Sydney Conservatorium of Music, for postgraduate study. In 2021, he graduated with a Doctor of Musical Arts qualification in composition, based on fusing electronic dance music traditions with experimental practice. As at 2022, he holds an academic staff role at the Conservatorium, teaching Contemporary Music Practice courses within its Bachelor of Music programme.[31]
Personal life
[edit]In October 2004, Mac was living in Erskineville.[32] Mac is openly gay; in 2007, he reminisced about his first attendance at Sydney's Mardi Gras in the 1980s: "I can't remember who the act even was – it was a long time ago ... I wasn't really out – actually, I wasn't out at all. I just ended up at the party and I remember realising that there was this whole world out there that I felt really proud to be a part of. There was such a sense of wonder".[33]
Discography
[edit]Studio albums
[edit]| Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | Certifications |
|---|---|---|---|
| AUS [34] | |||
| 3000 Feet High |
|
29 | |
| Panic Room |
|
39 | |
| Holiday From Me |
|
— | |
| Mesmerism |
|
— |
Extended plays
[edit]| Title | EP details |
|---|---|
| Paul Mac Presents Snapshots |
|
Singles
[edit]| Title | Year | Peak chart positions | Certifications | Album |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AUS [34] | ||||
| "Heatseeking Pleasure Machine" (featuring Tex Perkins) |
2001 | — | 3000 Feet High | |
| "Just the Thing" (featuring Peta Morris) |
17 |
| ||
| "The Sound of Breaking Up" (featuring Peta Morris) |
25 | |||
| "Gonna Miss You" (featuring Abby Dobson) |
2002 | 62 | ||
| "Stay" (featuring Jacqui Hunt) |
79 | |||
| "Sunshine Eyes" (featuring Peta Morris) |
2005 | 27 | Panic Room | |
| "Love Declaration" (featuring Aaradhna) |
2006 | 39 | ||
| "It's Not Me, It's You" (featuring Ngaiire) |
— | |||
| "The Only One" (featuring Bertie Blackman) |
2008 | 95 | Hey, Hey, It's Esther Blueburger soundtrack | |
| "State of War" | 2015 | — | Holiday from Me | |
| "The Currawong Shall Return" (with Andy Rantzen)[38] |
2018 | — | non-album single | |
| "Cataplexy"[39] | 2019 | — | Mesmerism | |
| "Flamenco"[40] | — |
Production work and other credits
[edit]- 1994 "Dead Eyes Opened (Love Experiment)", (remix) Dead Eyes Opened Remix Severed Heads
- 1996 "The Contender", "The Contender (reprise)" (remixes) Rock and Roll The Mark of Cain
- 1999 "Anthem for the Year 2000", "Spawn Again", "Satin Sheets" (keyboards) Neon Ballroom Silverchair
- 2000 I Can't Believe It's Not Rock (with Daniel Johns)
- 2002 "Across the Night", "World Upon Your Shoulders", "Tuna in the Brine", "Too Much of Not Enough", "Luv Your Life", "My Favourite Thing" (piano) Diorama Silverchair
- 2002 "Symphony of Life" (extended euroremix) Tina Arena
- 2004 "Pictures of You" (remix) One Perfect Day after The Cure's 1989 album Disintegration
- 2004 "She" (producer) Stella One Eleven Stella One Eleven
- 2005 (co-producer) Counting Down the Days Natalie Imbruglia
- 2005 "Mini Morris Parts 1 and 2" (performer with Cezary Skubiszewski) Hating Alison Ashley Various Artists
- 2025 "Something Good" (remix) (with The Superjesus)
Awards
[edit]ARIA Awards
[edit]PaulMac has won one award from seven ARIA Music Awards nominations.
| Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | "Just the Thing" | Best Dance Release | Nominated |
| Best Male Artist | Nominated | ||
| 2001 | 3000 Feet High | Best Dance Release | Won |
| Best Male Artist | Nominated | ||
| Engineer of the Year | Nominated | ||
| 2004 | PaulMac with Daniel Johns for The Dissociatives | Producer of the Year | Nominated |
| 2006 | Panic Room | Best Dance Release | Nominated |
APRA Awards
[edit]The APRA Awards are held in Australia and New Zealand by the Australasian Performing Right Association to recognise songwriting skills, sales and airplay performance by its members annually. PaulMac has won one award from four nominations.
| Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | "Just the Thing" | Most Performed Australian Work | Nominated |
| Most Performed Dance Work | Won | ||
| "The Sound of Breaking Up" | Nominated | ||
| 2006 | "Sunshine Eyes" | Most Performed Dance Work | Nominated |
References
[edit]- General
- McFarlane, Ian (1999). "Whammo Homepage". Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-072-1. Archived from the original on 5 April 2004. Retrieved 10 April 2012. Note: Archived [on-line] copy has limited functionality.
- Specific
- ^ "'Sunshine Eyes' at APRA search engine". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Retrieved 5 May 2010.
- ^ a b c d Brandle, Lars (16 July 2010). "Paul Mac: Return of the Mac". The Music Network (Peer Group Media). Archived from the original on 8 July 2012. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ^ Mac, Paul. "Mac, Paul". Trove. National Library of Australia. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ^ a b Nimmervoll, Ed (20 August 2001). "Paulmac – 3000 Feet High". Howlspace. White Room Electronic Publishing Pty Ltd. Archived from the original on 26 July 2012. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
- ^ a b c d McGregor, Paul. "About Paul Mac". Archived from the original on 1 January 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- ^ a b c Zuel, Bernard (18 June 2004). "Two Men and a Baby". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- ^ Kingsmill, Richard (22 November 2001). "Music Specials: Paul Mac". Triple J. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- ^ a b c d e McFarlane, 'Itch-E & Scratch-E' entry. Archived from the original on 30 September 2004. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ^ a b Jenkins, Jeff; Meldrum, Ian (2007). Molly Meldrum Presents 50 Years of Rock in Australia. Melbourne, Vic: Wilkinson Publishing. p. 230. ISBN 978-1-921332-11-1.
- ^ Paul Mac Presents Snapshots (Media notes). Paul Mac. Interdance Records. 1998. ID 008.
{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ a b c Hung, Steffen. "Discography Paul Mac". Australian Charts Portal. Hung Medien (Steffen Hung). Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ^ "Nominations 2002". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ^ "2002 Winners – APRA Music Awards". Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA). Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ^ "ARIA Awards – History: Winners by Year 2002: 16th Annual ARIA Awards". Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). Archived from the original on 11 December 2011. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- ^ Zuk, Tim (24 April 2001). "Love Is a Four Letter Word: Episode Guide: 'Split' Episode 13". Australian Television Information Archive. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- ^ Richard, Kingsmill (29 November 2000). "Daniel Johns of Silverchair Speaks to Richard Kingsmill". Triple J. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). Archived from the original on 29 January 2009. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ^ "The Dissociatives". Triple J. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). 2 April 2004. Archived from the original on 30 October 2011. Retrieved 12 September 2012.
- ^ "ARIA Awards – History: Winners by Year 2004: 18th Annual ARIA Awards". Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ^ a b Murfett, Andrew (14 November 2005). "The Paul Mac Experience". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ^ "Paul Mac Hates Celebrity Status". The Sydney Morning Herald. Australian Associated Press (AAP). 23 November 2005. Retrieved 14 September 2012.
- ^ "Paul Mac > Credits". AllMusic. Archived from the original on 25 May 2024. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- ^ Roberts, Jo (20 February 2008). "Whatever Possessed Them..." The Age. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ^ "Hey Hey It's Esther Blueburger" (PDF) (Press release). Tama Films Production. 20 March 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 October 2009. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- ^ a b c Cashmere, Paul (31 March 2011). "George Michael Records New Song with Paul Mac". Undercover (Paul Cashmere, Ros O'Gorman). Archived from the original on 2 April 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ^ "Stereogamous Remix LCD". The Music Network (Peer Group Media). 18 June 2010. Archived from the original on 3 March 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ^ Cashmere, Paul (5 March 2012). "Anthony Callea Works with Paul Mac on New EP". Noise11 (Paul Cashmere, Ros O'Gorman). Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ^ Lehman, Megan (6 September 2012). "Kath & Kimderella: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Lynne Segall (Prometheus Global Media). Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- ^ "Paul Mac Unveils New Album Details". themusic.com.au. 22 January 2015. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
- ^ "Paul Mac's first new single in ages takes us on a beautiful journey". ABC. 18 February 2019. Retrieved 25 March 2019.
- ^ "NFSA Restores: The Sentimental Bloke" (1919), NFSA. Retrieved 17 June 2025
- ^ "Paul Mac Academic Career". Retrieved 15 December 2022.
- ^ Sams, Christine (12 October 2004). "Band on the Run ... to the Inner West". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ^ Taylor, Christian (19 February 2007). "Paul Mac in the Manic Room". SameSame. Sound Alliance. Archived from the original on 19 December 2014. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- ^ a b Peaks in Australia:
- All except noted: "Paul Mac in Australian Charts". Australian Charts. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
- Peaks 51–100: Ryan, Gavin (2011). Australia's Music Charts 1988–2010 (PDF ed.). Mt Martha, Victoria, Australia: Moonlight Publishing. p. 214.
- ^ "ARIA Charts - Accreditations - 2002 Albums". ARIA. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
- ^ "Mesmerism". iTunes Australia. Archived from the original on 22 April 2019. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
- ^ "ARIA Charts - Accreditations - 2001 Singles". ARIA. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
- ^ "The Currawong Shall Return - single". iTunes Australia. 17 August 2018. Archived from the original on 22 April 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
- ^ "Cataplexy - single". iTunes Australia. 15 February 2019. Archived from the original on 1 May 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
- ^ "Flamenco - single". iTunes Australia. 12 April 2019. Archived from the original on 1 May 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
External links
[edit]Paul Mac
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Education
Childhood and Initial Musical Interests
Paul Francis McDermott, known professionally as Paul Mac, was born on 17 September 1965 in Sydney, Australia.[1] He grew up as the youngest of seven children in a strict Catholic family, where parents, though not particularly musical themselves, insisted that all siblings receive piano instruction to instill discipline and cultural appreciation. The family resided in a modest four-bedroom home featuring a dedicated room for the piano, reflecting the emphasis placed on classical training amid a devout household environment. Mac began piano lessons at age five under the tutelage of nuns, who employed rigorous methods such as rapping knuckles for errors, which initially fostered resentment toward formal practice. By his early teens, however, he developed proficiency through self-directed playing by ear, replicating favorite recordings and classical works, which sparked a deeper affinity for music over other youthful pursuits like model trains. As a teenager, he extended his keyboard skills by performing hymns on the organ at his local church, including for ceremonies such as weddings and funerals, providing early performance experience rooted in liturgical traditions.[9] These foundational encounters with piano and organ laid the groundwork for Mac's shift toward experimental sounds, influenced by mid-1980s post-punk and pop-funk genres that encouraged deviation from conventional structures. Lacking structured training in popular or rock idioms, he gravitated toward emerging electronic elements, experimenting informally with drum machines and sequencers during his late teens, which presaged his affinity for house, techno, and electropop without reliance on traditional band instrumentation. This self-guided exploration, distinct from his classical keyboard roots, highlighted an innate drive toward sonic innovation over rote proficiency.Formal Training and Academic Background
Paul Mac obtained a Bachelor of Music from the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, where he received classical training that emphasized foundational techniques in music theory and performance.[9][2] His coursework included preparation for music education roles, such as high school teaching, though Mac did not pursue that career trajectory, instead leveraging the rigor of classical studies to refine his compositional approach.[10] During this late-1980s period, he balanced conservatorium demands with parallel involvement in Sydney's underground electronic scene, including forming the band Smash Mac Mac in 1986.[2] The academic focus on harmony, counterpoint, and orchestration equipped Mac with skills that informed his subsequent electronic works, enabling deliberate fusions of structured classical forms with improvisational production methods.[9][4]Musical Career
Formation of Itch-E and Scratch-E (1991–1997)
In 1991, Paul Mac (performing as Itch-E) and Andy Rantzen (as Scratch-E) formed the electronic duo Itch-E and Scratch-E in Sydney, building on their collaborative experiments that began in 1989 by pooling analog equipment such as Mac's mixing desk alongside Rantzen's Roland TR-808 drum machine and TB-303 bass synthesizer.[11] Their production approach emphasized a laboratory-like ethos of improvisation and hands-on experimentation, recording extended live jams on DAT tape with real-time hardware manipulation rather than rigid sequencing, which allowed for organic evolution of tracks like the 22-minute precursor to "Awaken."[12] This method contrasted with the era's prevalent software-driven production, fostering a raw, techno-infused sound rooted in acid house influences amid Australia's rock-centric industry.[13] The duo's early output included the 1992 EP Irritable, followed by their debut album Itch-E Kitch-E Koo in 1993, which featured the single "Sweetness and Light" released in 1994.[11][12] "Sweetness and Light" achieved empirical success by peaking at number 21 on Triple J's Hottest 100 in 1994 and securing the ARIA Award for Best Dance Release in 1995, marking one of the first mainstream acknowledgments of electronic music in a landscape dominated by grunge and alternative rock acts.[13][11] These releases demonstrated the duo's causal influence in legitimizing dance genres, as their ARIA win highlighted grassroots support from public radio like Triple J and DJ networks over industry gatekeepers favoring guitar-based music. Itch-E and Scratch-E's live sets reinforced their underground impact, with residency-style performances at venues like Club 77—described as their spiritual home—and key appearances at clandestine events such as the 1992 Happy Valley bush doof and the Big Day Out's Boiler Room stage in 1994.[12][13] These gigs, often involving improvised sets on makeshift rigs amid dew-covered gear for sunrise slots, catered to Sydney's warehouse raves and illegal parkland parties, cultivating a countercultural scene that prioritized communal euphoria over commercial polish.[11][13] By 1997, their trajectory had helped elevate electronic music's visibility, challenging the rock hegemony through persistent innovation and scene-building despite limited major-label backing.Collaborations with Silverchair and Early Solo Ventures (1997–2000)
In 1997, Paul Mac remixed Silverchair's "Freak" from their album Freak Show, creating the "Remix for Us Rejects" version that infused electronic production into the band's post-grunge track. Released as a vinyl single, the remix highlighted Mac's approach of layering synthetic elements over rock instrumentation, marking an early crossover between his dance roots and mainstream rock.[14] This work paved the way for Mac to join Silverchair as a touring keyboardist during their Freak Show promotional tours in 1997 and beyond, where he provided live electronic enhancements to the trio's performances. His role as an auxiliary member added atmospheric depth, contributing to the band's evolving sound amid international arena shows.[15] Parallel to these rock engagements, Mac initiated early solo curation efforts with Paul Mac Presents SnapShots EP 1 in 1998, a 12-inch vinyl release on Interdance that compiled electronic tracks reflecting his broad influences from house to experimental beats. The EP underscored his curatorial eye for genre-blending selections, independent of major label rock structures. By 2000, Mac explored hybrid ventures with the EP I Can't Believe It's Not Rock, a five-track experimental release clocking 23 minutes that employed sampling and multi-layered production to merge electronic pulses with rock experimentation. This self-titled project demonstrated his techniques in recontextualizing guitar-driven elements through digital manipulation, fostering niche appeal in Australia's alternative scene.[16]The Dissociatives and Solo Album 3000 Feet High (2001–2005)
In 2001, Paul Mac released his debut solo album 3000 Feet High on 6 August through Eleven: A Music Company, featuring 12 tracks primarily written, produced, recorded, and mixed at his Fibromajestic studio in the Blue Mountains.[17] The album incorporated electropop elements with guest vocalists such as Peta Morris and Abby Dobson, achieving a top 40 position on the ARIA Albums Chart and marking Mac's transition to foreground artistry beyond production roles.[18] Its release coincided with live performances, including a debut set captured at Bohem in Sydney shortly after, highlighting adaptations of studio electronics to stage formats.[19] Concurrently, Mac formed The Dissociatives in collaboration with Silverchair frontman Daniel Johns, evolving from remixes and an initial five-track EP I Can't Believe It's Not Rock! recorded in 2000.[20] The project culminated in their self-titled debut album, released in April 2004 on Eleven, which fused rock songwriting with electronic production and certified gold in Australia based on sales exceeding 35,000 units.[21] Key singles like "Somewhere Down the Barrel" drove its commercial reception, with the album's 13 tracks emphasizing experimental blends of live instrumentation and synthesized elements.[22] Mac followed with his second solo effort Panic Room on 17 October 2005, comprising 10 tracks that peaked at number 39 on the ARIA Albums Chart and featured collaborators including Lenka on the title track and Ngaiire on "It's Not Me, It's You."[23] The album extended his electropop style, incorporating house influences and vocal-driven compositions produced under his direction.[24] The Dissociatives supported their album with international touring from 2004 to 2005, including appearances at Nova Rock Festival in Austria on 8–10 July 2005 alongside acts like Green Day and System of a Down, as well as shows at Mean Fiddler in London on 15 June 2005 and Rose Club in Cologne on 9 June 2005.[25] These performances, backed by touring members such as Julian Hamilton, James Haselwood, and Kim Moyes, adapted the duo's studio electronics for live rock-electronica hybrids, contributing to the project's short-lived but critically noted peak.[26]Soundtracks, Remixes, and Touring Phase (2008–2014)
In 2008, Paul Mac composed and produced the title track "The Only One" for the Australian coming-of-age film Hey Hey It's Esther Blueburger, featuring vocals by Bertie Blackman and the Sydney Children's Choir, which served as the film's opening theme and recurring motif.[27][28] That same year, he provided original music for the one-man comedy play Possessed, performed by Frank Woodley, blending electronic elements with theatrical scoring.[29] Mac also delivered the full score for the Australian drama Beautiful Kate (released 2009), handling writing, production, and engineering to underscore its familial tensions with atmospheric electronic textures.[30][3] Mac's remix work during this era expanded internationally through his Stereogamous collaboration with Jonny Seymour. In 2008, he remixed Faker's "Magnetic," altering its indie rock base with heightened electronic pulses and layered synths for club play.[3] By 2010, Stereogamous produced dubs for Kylie Minogue's "Cupid Boy" from her album Aphrodite, employing tempo acceleration, filtered vocals, and dub delays to transform the pop track into an extended dance version; Sia's "Bring Night"; and LCD Soundsystem's "I Can Change," which incorporated minimalist techno builds and echoing effects to extend its hypnotic groove.[3] These remixes, distributed via major labels like EMI and Parlophone, highlighted Mac's technique of integrating causal electronic manipulations—such as reverb swells and rhythmic deconstructions—to adapt commercial tracks for global electronic audiences.[31] For the 2012 comedy film Kath & Kimderella, Mac wrote, produced, and mixed "Never Can Say Goodbye" featuring Ngaiire, adapting the Jackson 5 classic into a disco-infused soundtrack piece that contributed to its lighthearted tone.[32] While specific touring records are sparse, Mac's international remix credits facilitated collaborations beyond Australia, including live DJ sets and promotional appearances tied to releases for U.S.-based LCD Soundsystem and UK-distributed Minogue tracks, underscoring his growing footprint in global electronic circuits without formal residencies documented in this period.[3]Recent Releases and Ongoing Projects (2015–Present)
In April 2015, Paul Mac released the solo album Holiday From Me, consisting of 11 tracks that blended electronic production with introspective lyrics, marking his return to full-length releases after nearly a decade.[33] The album included the single "State of War," featuring vocals by Kira Puru and production input from Goodwill, which addressed themes of conflict and personal turmoil through layered synths and rhythmic builds.[34] Tracks such as "Inside Outerspace" and "Mystery to Me" extended runtimes beyond five minutes, emphasizing atmospheric electronica over club-oriented beats.[35] Mac's next major project, the album Mesmerism, emerged on May 3, 2019, distributed via the Here To Hell label co-founded by Kim Moyes and Mike Callander.[36] This eight-track effort shifted toward immersive, ambient-leaning electronica, with extended compositions like the title track and "Seeking a Home in the Goldilocks Zone" incorporating subtle field recordings and minimalist structures to evoke contemplation and spatial depth.[37] One notable piece sampled Paul Keating's 1992 Redfern Address, integrating political rhetoric into hypnotic loops, a technique Mac attributed to exploring "mesmerism" as Dictionary.com's word of the year for inducing trance-like states.[38] Accompanied by a visual album series directed by Damian Barbeler, Mesmerism prioritized streaming accessibility, with full tracks available on platforms like Spotify and Bandcamp.[39] Post-2019 activities included selective collaborations amid a focus on studio-based production. In July 2020, Mac co-produced the dance/techno single "Full Circle" with Jack, performing as Willaris. K, which fused pulsating basslines with melodic progressions for digital release.[40] That September, he contributed electronic compositions to the "Music for Maton" installation at Sydney's Powerhouse Museum, partnering with Stereogamous and Nick Wales to score interactive exhibits featuring historic Maton guitars, blending acoustic sampling with synthetic textures.[41] No extensive live tours or performances were documented in this period, with Mac adapting to digital metrics through targeted streaming drops rather than traditional promotion. As of 2025, no further solo albums or major projects have been announced via official channels.[42]Production and Remixing Contributions
Key Productions for Other Artists
Paul Mac contributed additional production, recording, and keyboard performances to Silverchair's 2007 album Young Modern, which debuted at number one on the ARIA Albums Chart and received four ARIA Awards, including Album of the Year.[3][43] His involvement incorporated electronic textures and processing techniques, enhancing the album's blend of rock and experimental elements amid the band's shift from earlier grunge influences.[3] In 2010, Mac served as writer, producer, recording engineer, and mixer for George Michael's track "Every Other Lover," applying his signature drum programming and vocal layering to create a polished electropop sound.[3] The following year, he wrote and produced multiple tracks for The Potbelleez's album Destination Now, utilizing rhythmic electronic builds and synth-driven arrangements that aligned with the group's dance-rock style.[3] Earlier, Mac produced, recorded, and mixed Jimmy Somerville's "So Good" in 2004, employing vocal processing and upbeat electronic percussion to evoke 1980s hi-NRG influences while updating them for contemporary dance floors.[3] He also co-wrote and co-produced tracks on Ngaiire's 2011 album Blastoma, including "Fall Into My Arms," where his production emphasized atmospheric synths and dynamic builds to support her soulful vocals, contributing to her recognition as an emerging Australian artist.[3][44]| Artist | Project | Year | Role | Notable Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silverchair | Young Modern | 2007 | Additional production, recording, keys | #1 ARIA debut, 4 ARIA Awards |
| George Michael | "Every Other Lover" | 2010 | Writer, producer, recording, mixing | Electronic pop enhancement |
| The Potbelleez | Destination Now (various tracks) | 2011 | Writer, producer | Supported dance-rock cohesion |
| Jimmy Somerville | "So Good" | 2004 | Producer, recording, mixing | Hi-NRG revival elements |
| Ngaiire | Blastoma (e.g., "Fall Into My Arms") | 2011 | Co-writer, co-producer | Boosted atmospheric soul sound |
Influential Remixes and Techniques
Mac's remix of Silverchair's "Freak," issued as "Freak (Remix for Us Rejects)" on vinyl in 1996, transformed the original grunge track from the 1997 album Freak Show—characterized by distorted guitars and raw vocal delivery—into a version emphasizing looped percussion and electronic overlays for enhanced dancefloor appeal.[14][45] This adaptation retained core lyrics like "Yeah, I'm a freak of nature" while introducing breakbeat rhythms that dissected the song's structure, amplifying its rhythmic pulse over melodic elements.[46] The remix, produced amid Silverchair's rising popularity, bridged rock and electronic genres, paving the way for Mac's subsequent productions with the band.[10] In tracks like Gorillaz's "Dirty Harry (Paul Mac Remix)" from 2006, Mac applied similar deconstruction by isolating vocal hooks and instrumentation from the original's hip-hop and psychedelic base, then layering synthetic basslines and filtered effects to heighten its club-oriented energy.[47] His broader remix catalog, encompassing Australian acts such as Powderfinger, Grinspoon, The Cruel Sea, and INXS alongside international contributions for Sia, Kylie Minogue, and LCD Soundsystem, consistently featured techniques of rhythmic reprogramming—replacing organic drums with programmed sequences and applying dynamic processing to vocals for spatial depth.[31] These methods prioritized causal enhancement of groove through elemental breakdown, rebuilding originals via electronic augmentation rather than wholesale replacement.[10] Mac's remixes exerted verifiable impact on Australian electronic culture, as evidenced by his role in genre-blending outputs that informed subsequent producers during the 1990s techno surge, where Itch-E & Scratch-E's foundational work—including remix-adjacent innovations—secured ARIA recognition and elevated dance music's mainstream integration.[48] Industry retrospectives credit such contributions with fostering experimental remix practices, distinct from pure production, by demonstrating scalable sound design adaptations across rock-electronic hybrids.[10]Musical Style, Innovations, and Influences
Electronic and Electropop Elements
Paul Mac's electronic and electropop style emphasizes synthesizers, sampled loops, and vocoder processing, rooted in the 1990s Australian underground scene's adaptation of house and techno paradigms. During his tenure with Itch-E & Scratch-E, formed in 1991, these elements manifested in hardware-driven productions using analog synths like the Korg MS-20 for basslines and leads, alongside drum machine loops to construct propulsive, repetitive structures that echoed Detroit techno influences while incorporating local post-punk noise aesthetics.[49] Tracks like "Sweetness & Light" (1993) exemplify this approach, where interlocking percussive loops and filtered synth stabs create rhythmic density—layering 4/4 kicks with off-kilter hi-hats and evolving tonal sequences—prioritizing textural groove over linear melody, a constraint of early digital audio workstations that necessitated iterative sampling to build complexity from minimal sources.[12][50] This methodology carried into solo electropop works, such as the vocoder-dub remix of "Love Declaration" (2008), where vocal formant shifting via vocoder integrates with looped synth arpeggios to evoke Kraftwerk-inspired futurism, fostering innovation through the medium's inherent limitations on live instrumentation.[51][52] In later productions, like those on Mesmerism (2019), Mac employs software emulations of vintage synths alongside granular loops to heighten rhythmic intricacy, as in "Six Years in Seven Minutes," where polyrhythmic overlays—combining straight techno pulses with swung micro-variations—emerge from probabilistic sequencing techniques, demonstrating how electronic tooling's repeatability enabled experimentation unbound by acoustic physics.[51][53] Such constraints, prevalent in 1990s setups reliant on hardware sequencers and limited polyphony, compelled causal refinements in arrangement, yielding emergent patterns that traditional band formats rarely afford.[54]Integration of Classical and Experimental Approaches
Paul Mac's formal classical training at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, including a Bachelor of Music Education with a piano major, provided foundational skills in ear training, composition, arranging, voice leading, and scoring that he later integrated into experimental electronic works.[4] This background informed his methodical approach to structure and harmonic progression, drawing from influences such as minimalist composers like Steve Reich and Philip Glass, whose repetitive patterns and textural layering resonated with his electronic experimentation.[4] In 2021, Mac completed a Doctor of Musical Arts in composition at the Sydney Conservatorium, with his research explicitly centered on fusing electronic dance music traditions—characterized by rhythmic drive and synthesis—with experimental practices rooted in conservatorium theory, such as polyphonic development and timbral exploration.[55] This synthesis enabled hybrid techniques where classical contrapuntal ideas underpin modular-like electronic layering, creating compositions that balance rigorous formal architecture with improvisatory electronic flux, as evidenced in his doctoral portfolio's emphasis on innovative sound design.[55] Mac applied these integrated methods in film scoring projects, where he combined orchestral string sections for emotive depth with experimental electronic processing to achieve novel timbres, marking his third such score by 2013.[4] His affinity for contemporary classical ensembles is reflected in works that adapt conservatorium-honed scoring for mixed-media settings, prioritizing causal relationships between acoustic and synthesized elements over purely genre-bound conventions.[56]Controversies and Industry Critiques
1995 ARIA Awards Speech and Industry Backlash
At the 1995 ARIA Music Awards, electronic duo Itch-E and Scratch-E, comprising Paul Mac and Andy Rantzen, received the inaugural Best Dance Release award for their single "Sweetness and Light," released in 1994 on Volition Records.[5] In the acceptance speech delivered by Mac, he emphasized the track's DIY origins, stating, "This track was made at home in a bedroom, so anybody can do it," while crediting supporters including DJs, public radio stations, ravers, and—controversially—Sydney's ecstasy dealers, declaring, "We'd like to thank all of Sydney's ecstasy dealers, without whom this award would not be possible."[11] [57] The reference to ecstasy dealers was censored during the live broadcast, underscoring the speech's provocative tone aimed at highlighting the Australian music industry's perceived neglect of dance and electronic genres in favor of rock-dominated promotion and infrastructure.[5] Mac later described the remarks as a deliberate "fuck you" to industry executives, stemming from frustration over inadequate nurturing of dance music's potential audience reach, including limited radio play and marketing compared to established rock acts.[5] [8] The speech triggered immediate backlash, generating media coverage that debated its irreverence and the duo's unscripted candor; notably, the National Drug Offensive, an ARIA sponsor focused on anti-drug campaigns, withdrew its support in response to the drug references.[5] Despite the short-term uproar, the incident drew attention to systemic underinvestment in electronic music ecosystems, such as club circuits and specialist promotion, which Mac argued hindered genre growth.[5] Over time, as Australia's electronic scene expanded—with increased festival integrations, chart successes for acts like The Avalanches, and broader ARIA recognition for dance categories—the speech's critique gained retrospective validation, with Mac reflecting in 2022 that it represented "the best career move I ever made" by amplifying underground authenticity amid industry conservatism.[5] [57]Academic and Compositional Pursuits
Advanced Degrees and Research
In 2021, Paul Mac, whose full name is Paul McDermott, received a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in composition from the Sydney Conservatorium of Music at the University of Sydney.[58] His doctoral research emphasized the development of a singular compositional methodology that merges electronic dance music (EDM) conventions with experimental techniques, aiming to bridge popular electronic traditions and formal composition.[58][55] A key output from this research was the composition The Rise & Fall of St. George, premiered at Hamer Hall in Melbourne on February 29, 2020, and subsequently performed at the Sydney Festival on January 9, 2021.[58] This orchestral work incorporates electronic elements alongside traditional instrumentation, reflecting Mac's focus on hybrid forms that challenge conventional genre boundaries in contemporary music.[58] Mac's broader research interests encompass the historical evolution of Australian dance music and innovative integrations of EDM within academic and experimental contexts, informing his compositional experiments without reliance on peer-reviewed journal publications to date.[58]Teaching Role at Sydney Conservatorium
Dr. Paul (Mac) McDermott, professionally known as Paul Mac, has served as a lecturer at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music since completing his Doctor of Musical Arts in Composition in 2021.[58] [59] He contributes to the Bachelor of Music Studies (Contemporary Music Practice) program, where instruction emphasizes practical skills in songwriting, electronic production, and performance for aspiring singers, songwriters, and band members.[58] [60] McDermott's curriculum integrates his industry expertise from over three decades as an ARIA Award-winning producer and electronic musician, focusing on inventive techniques for contemporary music creation rather than solely theoretical analysis.[61] [62] Courses under his guidance cover dance music production and composition, bridging classical training with modern electronic practices to equip students for professional environments.[62] This approach prioritizes hands-on mentoring, drawing on real-world projects like his compositions for events such as Vivid Sydney, to illustrate causal links between innovative sound design and audience impact.[56] Feedback from program descriptions highlights a balance favoring empirical, production-oriented learning over abstract theory, enabling students to apply industry-standard tools and workflows directly.[60] McDermott's role fosters outcomes such as enhanced compositional versatility, with alumni benefiting from his insights into evolving electronic genres, though specific longitudinal student data remains limited in public records.[55]Reception, Achievements, and Criticisms
Critical Acclaim and Commercial Performance
Paul Mac's debut solo album 3000 Feet High, released on 6 August 2001, entered the top 40 of the ARIA Albums Chart, marking a breakthrough in commercial visibility for his electronic-pop fusion.[18] The album's lead single "The Sound of Breaking Up," issued in October 2001, peaked at number 25 on the ARIA Singles Chart, demonstrating mainstream appeal amid Australia's dance music scene.[63] His follow-up Panic Room, released on 17 October 2005, also charted in the ARIA top 40, underscoring sustained market performance for his solo output.[64] Critics have praised Mac's contributions to Australian electronic music, highlighting his role in blending innovative production techniques with accessible melodies. 3000 Feet High earned the 2002 ARIA Award for Best Dance Release, with reviewers noting its elevation of electronic genres through collaborations with vocalists like Tex Perkins and Sophie Koh.[6] Rolling Stone Australia recognized Mac's trajectory—from Itch-E and Scratch-E's techno anthems to solo and remix work—in its 2025 list of the 50 greatest Australian electronic acts, crediting him with critical acclaim including a 2012 Grammy nomination for remixing Deadmau5's "Strobe."[65] Mac's achievements helped legitimize electronic music in Australia, where his ARIA wins for dance releases—as with Itch-E and Scratch-E's inaugural 1995 Best Dance Release for "Sweetness & Light"—bridged underground rave culture to broader industry acceptance.[57] This recognition paralleled commercial gains, enabling high-profile remixes for artists like Kylie Minogue and Silverchair, which expanded electronic production's credibility beyond niche audiences.[10]Criticisms of Artistic Direction and Market Impact
Critics have observed that Paul Mac's electropop and electronic-oriented style fostered a dedicated but niche following, constraining broader commercial penetration in a market dominated by more accessible pop and rock acts. His debut solo album 3000 Feet High, released on August 6, 2001, via Eleven/Virgin, exemplified this, peaking at number 29 on the ARIA Albums Chart and charting for only six weeks in the top 50, despite the lead single "Just the Thing" reaching number 17 and earning gold certification for over 35,000 units sold.[66][67] In comparison, contemporaneous Australian releases like Kylie Minogue's Fever (2001) topped the ARIA chart for weeks and achieved multi-platinum status exceeding 140,000 units, underscoring the narrower market reach of electronic genres during the era. Early reviews highlighted inconsistencies in artistic direction, particularly a perceived diffuseness in personal voice amid collaborative features and genre experimentation. One assessment of 3000 Feet High remarked that "it was hard to know who lay behind the songs and those other voices," attributing this to Mac's novice status in original songwriting, as he had "never written songs before" and was navigating pop structures tentatively. Mac has echoed such self-doubt, describing his internal critique as his "worst enemy," rooted in perfectionist tendencies that amplified perceived shortcomings in output cohesion.[68] Debates among observers have centered on Mac's emphasis on remixing for high-profile acts—such as contributions to Silverchair and Kylie Minogue—potentially at the expense of sustained original compositional depth, though empirical sales data reflect the inherent challenges of electronic music's commercial viability rather than directional flaws alone. Mac himself noted the "commercially driven death" of dance music trends around the mid-2000s, signaling an awareness of market constraints influencing artistic pivots toward more introspective, less formulaic work.[48]Personal Life
Relationships and Family
Paul Mac was raised in a devout Catholic household in Arncliffe, Sydney, as the youngest of seven children in a four-bedroom family home. His parents enforced classical piano training on all siblings from an early age, providing Mac's initial immersion in music theory and performance that later informed his electronic compositions and productions.[10][9] He collaborated musically with his brother Greg in the early band Smash Mac Mac, blending familial encouragement with experimental sounds.[10] Mac identifies as queer and has described entering Sydney's underground dance scenes in his early 20s before being publicly out, where these environments offered creative liberation from his conservative upbringing and shaped his electropop trajectory.[9][10] No public records detail marriages, long-term partnerships, or children as of October 2025.[10][9]Health and Lifestyle Factors
Paul Mac has kept details of his health and lifestyle largely private, with no publicly documented major health challenges or recoveries that have notably disrupted his musical output or productivity.[69] This discretion aligns with his broader approach to personal matters, prioritizing professional focus over public disclosure of intimate aspects. Extensive career longevity, spanning from 1980s electronic productions to contemporary compositions and teaching as of 2024, implies effective personal management supporting consistent creative phases without evident empirical breaks tied to health events.[3]Discography
Studio Albums
Paul Mac released his debut solo studio album, 3000 Feet High, on 6 August 2001 through the independent label Eleven: A Music Company. The album comprises 12 tracks, primarily in electronic styles including breakbeat and house, recorded at his Fibromajestic studio in the Blue Mountains.[70][71] It reached the top 40 on the ARIA Albums Chart and sold sufficiently to earn gold accreditation in Australia.[72] His sophomore solo studio album, Panic Room, was issued on 17 October 2005, again by Eleven: A Music Company, in a limited-edition double-CD format featuring 10 principal tracks on the first disc and a continuous mix on the second.[73][23] The record incorporates vocal collaborations with artists such as Lenka and Ngaiire, maintaining an electronic house orientation, and peaked at number 39 on the ARIA Albums Chart.[74][75] It received an ARIA nomination for Best Dance Release in 2006.Extended Plays and Singles
Paul Mac's early career under the Itch-E & Scratch-E moniker included the extended plays Ultra (1992) and Terminal (1993), released via rooArt Records, which featured experimental electronic tracks blending techno and breakbeat elements.[76] These EPs laid groundwork for the duo's club-oriented sound but did not achieve significant commercial chart success. The standout single "Sweetness and Light" (1994), from the associated album Itch-E Kitch-E Koo, peaked at number 65 on the ARIA Singles Chart, remaining for 11 weeks, and earned the ARIA Award for Best Dance Release in 1995.[77][78] Transitioning to solo work, Mac issued the Snapshots EP 1 (1998) on Interdance, a four-track vinyl release showcasing ambient and downtempo compositions, though it received limited airplay and no ARIA charting. His breakthrough solo singles arrived in 2001, promoting 3000 Feet High. "Just the Thing" (featuring Peta Morris), released June 17, 2001, reached number 17 on the ARIA Singles Chart and was certified gold for over 35,000 units sold.[79][79] "The Sound of Breaking Up" (also featuring Morris), issued November 11, 2001, peaked at number 25.[80] Subsequent singles included "Stay" (featuring Jacqui Hunt, 2002) and "Gonna Miss You" (2002), which garnered niche electronic airplay but failed to chart prominently on ARIA.[81] Later releases, such as "Sunshine Eyes" (featuring Peta Morris, 2005) from Panic Room era, emphasized vocal collaborations yet saw minimal mainstream metrics.[81]| Single | Release Year | Peak ARIA Position | Featured Artist |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sweetness and Light (Itch-E & Scratch-E) | 1994 | 65 | None |
| Just the Thing | 2001 | 17 | Peta Morris |
| The Sound of Breaking Up | 2001 | 25 | Peta Morris |
Collaborative and Production Credits
Paul Mac contributed keyboards to several tracks on Silverchair's 1999 album Neon Ballroom, initiating a series of collaborations with frontman Daniel Johns.[82] He co-produced and co-wrote the self-titled 2004 album by The Dissociatives, a project pairing Mac with Johns that blended electronic and rock elements across 11 tracks.[83] Mac also recorded piano parts for Silverchair's 2007 album Young Modern and served as a touring keyboardist for the band.[84] As a remixer, Mac handled early work such as Silverchair's "Freak" from their 1997 album Freak Show, and produced remixes for Powderfinger, Grinspoon, The Mark of Cain, The Cruel Sea, INXS, and Placebo.[21][85] Under the Stereogamous moniker (a remix duo with Jonny Seymour), Mac delivered electronic reworks including RÜFÜS DU SOL's "Be with You," HANDSOME's "Late Night Ball Game" featuring Joyride, Radical Son's "Elder" featuring Jida Gulpilil (2024), and Ripple Effect Band's "Cyclone" (2024).[31][86][87] These efforts extended to artists like Sia, Kylie Minogue, LCD Soundsystem, and George Michael, though specific track details vary by release.[3]Awards and Recognition
ARIA Awards
Paul Mac first gained ARIA Award recognition in the dance category as part of the electronic duo Itch-E and Scratch-E. In 1995, they won the inaugural Best Dance Release for the single "Sweetness and Light".[57][5] Mac secured a second win in the Best Dance Release category in 2002 for "3000 Feet High", from his self-titled debut solo album.[88][6] This victory highlighted his continued prominence in electronic and dance music production. In 2004, Mac's project The Dissociatives with Daniel Johns earned six nominations, including Album of the Year for their self-titled album, Best Group, Best Independent Release, Best Cover Art, Best Video, and Producer of the Year; however, they did not win any of these, with awards in visual categories going to collaborator James Hackett.[89][90] These nominations underscored Mac's versatility beyond dance but also reflected unsuccessful expansion into broader rock and pop categories.[91] Mac's ARIA achievements demonstrate a pattern of success and nomination concentration in dance/electronic releases, with two wins in Best Dance Release amid limited broader category breakthroughs.[44]APRA Awards and Other Honors
In 2002, Paul Mac won the APRA Music Award for Most Performed Dance Work for his single "Just the Thing", featuring vocals by Peta Morris.[92][93] This recognition highlighted his songwriting contributions to Australian dance music, as determined by performance data tracked by APRA AMCOS.[92] Beyond APRA accolades, Mac received Australian Dance Music Awards for Outstanding Contribution to Dance and Producer of the Year, acknowledging his influence in electronic production and innovation.[3] He also secured the MTV Australia International Viewer's Choice Award for "Just the Thing", based on global fan voting.[94] Additionally, Rolling Stone's Readers Poll named him Dance Artist of the Year on three occasions, reflecting peer and audience esteem for his solo and collaborative output.[4] These honors underscore Mac's emphasis on compositional craft over commercial sales, with no further major non-ARIA songwriting or lifetime industry recognitions reported through 2025.References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Paul_Mac
